Ukraine: The World is being Caught Watching a Crime
The
free world should stop hiding behind Article 5 and take off its NATO insignia
and actively help Ukraine – not support but join the ranks of the defenders – defend
not only itself but all of the countries that hold membership in the alliance
and the assorted kindred spirits. Many national leaders and pundits have
admitted that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine will not have regional
repercussions. Today Russia is not expected to halt its belligerence with
Ukraine as a renewed captive nations in its evil empire. Its aggression
threatens the former captive nations and countries beyond. It is a valid
question to wonder why the free world acquiesced to Winston Churchill’s
prodding and united to defeat Nazi Germany eight decades ago.
The
level of Russian brutality – genocide – in Ukraine is without comparison.
Moscow has achieved its own sole place in the premier league of war criminals.
It must be stopped. Women and girls aged so young it makes your blood boil are
publically raped, killed and thrown in a common grave like trash by Russian
soldiers, repeating the bestiality of their predecessors in Germany after the
Second World War. Civilians of all ages are indiscriminately killed by the
Russian invaders. Finally, the countryside and municipalities have been
destroyed. Future invaders will be evaluated on the basis of the Bucha horrors.
Enough! Short of allied soldiers, Ukraine urgently needs every possible defensive
and offensive weapon in the free world’s arsenal today, not tomorrow.
Seven
years ago, on May 13, 2015, at the start of the Russo-Ukraine War, I wrote an
article about the war – a war that has now become a War of Ukrainian
Independence – and the lack of active support for Ukraine. In it I cited the
tragedy of Kitty Genovese, who was raped and killed while people watched the
crime take place.
***
The
international community’s reaction to what is happening to Ukraine is incomprehensible.
World leaders – the usual motley group of North American, European and
Asia ones – have been incapable of doing anything to stop
Russia from continuing to ravage Ukraine for the sake of its imperial
expansion and to protect Ukraine from Russia’s bloody military
advances.
How
can this be taking place in the 21st century? Hasn’t anyone read history? Isn’t
the conclusion obvious?
As I
think about my own questions, my thoughts drift to an event that had its place
in the borough of Queens in New York City 51 years ago. A young
woman was killed in full view of her neighbors who actually witnessed
from the comfort of their high-rise apartment windows what was happening and
couldn’t or wouldn’t do anything to stop the assailant or protect the
unfortunate woman.
Here
is an excerpt from Martin Gansberg’s article in The New York Times of March
27, 1964.
For
more than half an hour 38 respectable, law-abiding citizens in Queens
watched a killer stalk and stab a woman in three separate attacks in
Kew Gardens.
Twice
their chatter and the sudden glow of their bedroom lights interrupted him and
frightened him off. Each time he returned, sought her out, and stabbed her
again. Not one person telephoned the police during the assault; one witness
called after the woman was dead…
Twenty-eight-year-old Catherine
Genovese, who was called Kitty by almost everyone in the neighborhood, was
returning home from her job as manager of a bar in Hollis…
The
entrance to the apartment is in the rear of the building because the front is
rented to retail stores. At night the quiet neighborhood is shrouded in the
slumbering darkness that marks most residential areas.
Miss
Genovese noticed a man at the far end of the lot, near a seven-story apartment
house at 82-40 Austin Street. She halted. Then, nervously, she headed up Austin
Street toward Lefferts Boulevard, where there is a call box to the 102nd Police
Precinct in nearby Richmond Hill.
She
got as far as a street light in front of a bookstore before the man grabbed
her. She screamed. Lights went on in the 10-story apartment house at 82-67
Austin Street, which faces the bookstore. Windows slid open and voices
punctuated the early-morning stillness.
Miss
Genovese screamed: “Oh, my God, he stabbed me! Please help me! Please help
me!”…
The
assailant stabbed her again.
“I'm
dying!” she shrieked. “I’m dying!”…
Gansberg
concluded his article by writing: “It was 4:25 A.M. when the ambulance arrived
to take the body of Miss Genovese. It drove off. “Then,” a solemn police
detective said, “the people came out.”
Kitty’s
neighbors offered a variety of excuses why they allowed her to
be killed in their voyeuristic presence.
“I
didn’t want to get involved.”
“We
thought it was a lovers’ quarrel.”
“I
didn't want my husband to get involved.”
“We
went to the window to see what was happening … but the light from our bedroom
made it difficult to see the street … I put out the light and we were able to
see better.” Asked why they didn’t call the police, the wife shrugged and
replied: “I don't know.”
“I
was tired."
“I
went back to bed."
On a
personal level, the murder of Kitty Genovese and the callous disregard for her
life by her neighbors was devastating and inhuman.
On a
national level, Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the indiscriminate killing of
Ukrainian civilians and soldiers (and rape of women and girls) along with the
callous disregard for what is happening there by countries near and far is
also devastating and inhuman. The UN says more than 6,000 civilians
have died because of Russia’s war with Ukraine. (That number has since then
spiked to astronomical levels.)
On a
global scale, thanks to all sorts of technological advances, Russia’s
undeclared war against Ukraine is being witnessed by the same callous,
immovable, unconcerned, indifferent neighbors who witnessed Kitty’s
murder five decades ago. Their apathetic explanations are
identical to those who saw Kitty killed in cold blood.
While
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was undeclared and unexpected, the
subsequent occupation of Crimea and Donbas, and Moscow’s advances westward did
not occur without some sort of spy in the sky warnings. Especially in the past
several weeks Ukrainian and NATO military and political sources have been daily
cautioning that Russia is amassing tens of thousands of soldiers on its border
with Ukraine in preparation for a significant escalation of hostilities. Do
something before it’s too late, they plead.
Moscow’s
occupation of Crimea, Donetsk and Luhansk has also scared the other Eastern
European former captive nations into reviewing its defense capabilities and
seeking military help from NATO.
Last
month Viktor Muzhenko, Ukraine’s army chief of staff, listed for
the first time some of the specific Russian military units fighting in Ukraine
alongside Moscow’s terrorists in eastern Ukraine.
“Regular
Russian army troops are still in Ukraine,” Muzhenko said for all the world
to hear. “We have details of all the Russian units, where they are deployed,
their numbers and their weapons.”
Muzhenko
named among them the Russian army’s 15th Mechanized Infantry Brigade, the 8th
Mechanized Infantry Brigade, the 331st Airborne Regiment and the 98th Airborne
Division.
Just
like murdered Russian journalist Boris Nemtsov, the Ukrainian official said
Kyiv has proof that Russian regular troops had fought in three clashes in the
east in February, including a fierce battle for the railroad town of
Debaltseve, which is now controlled by Russian mercenaries.
Russian-backed
militants have dramatically also increased their activity in the Donbas
conflict zone, head of the Information Resistance group and military
blogger Dmytro Tymchuk wrote on his Facebook page. According
to Tymchuk, the militants fired artillery and 120mm mortars, and tried to
attack the Ukrainian units, including using armored vehicles. A sharp
growth of militant activity has been recorded in the Luhansk, Donetsk
and in coastal areas, he said.
The
Russian terrorists in the Donbas region in early April were to have almost 700
tanks and 1,100 armored combat vehicles, according to the report of deputy
commander of the ATO Valentyn Fedichev from the information
center of the Donetsk regional military and civil administration in Kramatorsk,
reported Express TV.
“According
to the Minsk agreements, the 9,000 servicemen of the Russian regular armed
forces must leave the occupied territories of Donetsk and Luhansk regions, and
all military equipment that has been illegally transferred by Russia to the
territory of a sovereign state, and this is almost 700 tanks, more than 1,100
armored combat vehicles, nearly 600 artillery systems, more than 380 MLRS and
110 air defense systems, must be withdrawn," Fedichev said.
They
didn’t while, according to him, on April 7, 40 items of military equipment,
including 10 tanks, arrived in Luhansk. On April 6, two companies of Russian
troops arrived in the area of Debaltseve in Donetsk region.
"In
[Russia’s] Rostov region training is being conducted on combat operations
performance in the city. More than 1,500 troops of the special forces of the
Russian Federation Armed Forces are involved in the exercises," Fedichev
said.
US military sources have corroborated Ukrainian’s justified fears.
Retired Gen.
Wesley Clark, former head of US and NATO forces in Europe, warned at an
exclusive briefing with the Atlantic Council that a renewed Russian offensive
in Ukraine was imminent and would most probably take place between Orthodox
Easter on April 12 and Russia’s celebrations of VE Day on May 8. While both
dates have come and gone, Russia’s escalation is still held at bay for reasons
which may be simple as the army isn’t ready to attack.
“Ukrainian
forces expect attack within the next sixty days,” Clark recently wrote for
the Atlantic Council. “This assessment is based on geographic imperatives, the
ongoing pattern of Russian activity, and an analysis of Russian actions,
statements, and Putin’s psychology to date.”
Clark
was joined by the top US commander for NATO who urged that America needs better
intelligence on the ground in Ukraine, and added that it appears Russian forces
have used a recent lull in fighting to reposition for another offensive.
Gen.
Philip Breedlove,
commander of NATO forces in Europe, told the Senate Armed Services Committee,
who has expressed concern about Russia’s aggression, said the situation in
Ukraine is volatile and fragile and urged Congress to bolster U.S. intelligence
capabilities to better understand Putin’s intent in the region.
“Russian
military operations over the past year in Ukraine, and the region more broadly,
have underscored that there are critical gaps in our collection and analysis,”
Breedlove said. “Some Russian military exercises have caught us by surprise and
our textured feel for Russian involvement on the ground in Ukraine has been
quite limited.”
This movement
of invaders is obviously directed by Russians, Breedlove assured. “We do
see a very distinct Russian set of command and control in the eastern part of
Ukraine,” he said. "Command-and-control, air defense, support to
artillery, all of these things increased ... making a more coherent, organized
force out of the separatists.”
In
one 48-hour period in April, as Ukrainian forces faced 20 attacks by
Russian-led militants and spotted 30 enemy drones probing their positions,
the Frankurter Allgemeine Zeitung quoted an unnamed NATO
official saying that Russia has sent additional military manpower and arms to
Donbas.
“We
have noticed again support for the separatists, with weapons, troops and
training. Russia is still sending troops and arms from one side of the open
border with Ukraine to the other,” the NATO official told the German news
publication.
The
press center of Ukraine’s Anti-Terrorist Operation headquarters has been
regularly reporting that Russian-backed militants have been violating the terms
of the Minsk agreement, attacking Ukrainian forces with weapons they were
supposed to have withdrawn from the front line. Russia began violating
the truce before the ink dried on the agreements. (Ambassador Sergey Kyslytsya, permanent representative of Ukraine to
the United Nations, acerbically said Russia’s promises aren’t worth a New York
City pretzel hole.)
NATO
Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg reported a sizeable Russian
military buildup on the border with Ukraine that he said would enable
pro-Moscow separatists to launch a new offensive with little warning.
Stoltenberg said Russia has substantially stepped up supplies to the rebels, as
well as providing them with advanced training and equipment like drones,
despite a cease-fire.
Stoltenberg
said the Russian moves undermine the cease-fire declared in eastern Ukraine and
violate the Minsk agreements entered into by Moscow. He said more than 1,000
pieces of Russian military equipment have been moved over the past month,
including tanks, artillery and air defense units.
Stoltenberg
said this “gives reason for great concern” and would enable the
separatists to go on the offensive again with little warning.
The
list of officials exposing Russia’s impending military escalation against Ukraine
includes John Herbst, a former US ambassador to Ukraine. He said
recent military moves by Russia show that President Putin's “minimal goal is
to destabilize the current government” in Ukraine. The maximum goal would
probably be to re-subjugate the former captive nations.
Herbst,
who now directs the Eurasia Center at the Atlantic Council, a Washington think
tank, said from Kyiv that “Putin is ramping up pressure on Ukraine by adding
troops on the eastern border and in Crimea and by increasing the violations
across the ceasefire line and in order to do that, he can’t simply sit behind
the ceasefire line. He needs to move forward to cause additional instability
in the country.”
Ukraine
has repeatedly urged its neighbors and allies to send it weapons and accused
rebels of persistent ceasefire violations as NATO warned about an increase in
Russian troop movement both near and across the border.
“The Ukrainian
army needs weapons to defend Ukraine,” Prime Minister Arseniy
Yatsenyuk told parliamentarians. “And our western partners must hear:
Now the Ukrainian army is struggling not just for itself, but we are fighting
for peace and stability in the EU.”
But
Ukraine’s nearest neighbors have turned a deaf ear. EU leaders have
told Ukraine they are worried about ceasefire violations in the east of the
country but will not send armed peacekeepers there. “We can only talk about
a civilian mission, not military,” European Council President Donald
Tusk said.
President
Obama, at
a joint press conference with Japanese Prime Minister Shinzō Abe in Washington,
demonstrated understanding the global threat posed by Russia’s belligerence.
Obama said the acts of Russian aggression against Ukraine are a threat to
the world that must be confronted in a global context,
“We
oppose the Russian aggression against Ukraine, provide assistance to
civilians under threat of the Islamic State extremist group, fight against the
Ebola virus and promote global health, and now we’re offering assistance to the
people of Nepal,” Obama said.
Despite these words and as increased Russian fighting on the ground in eastern
Ukraine continues to claim innocent lives and disrupt regional peace and
stability, members of the U.S. Congress once again are
pressing Obama to request lethal military aid for Ukraine
to combat Russian-backed rebels. The president already has ignored a resolution
urging lethal US aid for Ukraine that the House passed by 348 to 48 votes.
Consequently, the US President joins the neighbors who pulled down the window
shades as the knife plunged into the innocent passerby.
“There
is no doubt that it is important to provide humanitarian assistance to the
population that is affected by the fighting. However, this aid only treats the
symptoms of a larger problem,” read the statement by Reps. Michael
Fitzpatrick (R-PA), Sander Levin (D-MI), and Marcy
Kaptur (D-OH). “The Ukrainian government is in dire need of defensive
weapons, which are necessary to protect its borders and sovereignty.”
Pro-Russian
separatists appear to be making preparations for a fresh offensive in eastern
Ukraine, US Defense Secretary Ashton Carter told lawmakers.
“It does appear that clearly, Russian-backed separatists in eastern Ukraine are
preparing for another round of military action that would be inconsistent with
the Minsk agreement,” Carter told the Senate Appropriations defense
subcommittee.
Ukrainian
President Poroshenko said
the threat of a large-scale offensive from the side of Russian-backed militants
has been growing, and the strength of the enemy’s troops is estimated at 40,000
men, while another 50,000 servicemen are deployed along the border with
Ukraine.
Even
with this imminent threat, Poroshenko said that Ukrainians ready to defend
country and that the morale of the Ukrainian armed forces is currently at its
best, as has been the case in recent history.
“We
keep getting more evidence and information proving that the aggressor will
commence a military offensive in the second half of May. I don’t want to
frighten anyone, and you should know that the country is capable of protecting
its citizens,” he said.
Poroshenko
emphasized that the war will be over when Donbas and Crimea
are returned to Ukraine. Nothing more, nothing less. That is the line
in the sand, which must be recognized by friends and foes.
In
the meantime, Ukrainian servicemen step up the pace of digging trenches on
a beach in the port city of Mariupol, about eight miles from Shyrokyne, on the
Azov Sea, where the next Russian onslaught is anticipated.
***
The
global neighborhood must consider what it will do when they hear: “Oh, my
God, he stabbed me! Please help me! Please help me!”… “I'm dying!”